Main Page Content:
RSS feed
-

Why a free press can’t be dismantled to accommodate the ‘foibles’ of the rich and famous

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 10 February 2012 at 13:56
Tags: Leveson, Paul Dacre

Daily Mail editor Paul Dacre put forward a compelling case for intruding into the private lives of the rich and famous in his supplementary witness statement to the Leveson Inquiry.

In it he quotes from a piece written gy Auberon Waugh for the New Statesman in the 1970s, defending legendary Mail gossip writer Nigel Dempster. (more…)

-

News-Day: 8 February, 2012 – How was it for you?

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 9 February 2012 at 15:09
Tags: Journalism, Journalists, Law, Leveson

Press Gazette wants to hear what you did yesterday for A Day in the Life of British Journalism – our project telling the story of one 24-hour news cycle.

Reports are already coming in from all over the UK, and the world. Press Gazette contributing editor John Dale is pulling them together into one narrative as I write – to appear in the March edition of Press Gazette magazine and online. (more…)

-

Today is News-Day: A Day in the Life of British Journalism, tell us what you are doing

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 8 February 2012 at 11:05
Tags: Journalism

Don’t forget today is News-Day – Press Gazette’s project charting A Day in the Life of British Journalism.

The day runs from 6am today (8 February) until 6am tomorrow. We want to hear from journalists serving British media of all kinds – nationals, regionals, broadcast, B2B, radio, mags – and all around the world.

To participate in A Day in the Life of British Journalism,  please send in reports of what you have got up today to Press Gazette contributing editor John Dale who will be pulling together reports for online and for the print edition of Press Gazette.

Describe your day by emailing johnkdale@msn.com.

More details about the project here on John Dale’s website.

There has been a lot of muck dredged up by Lord Justice Leveson – this is a unique opportunity to provide a 24-hour snapshot of what British journalists really get up to on a day to day basis.

-

Times did a disservice to whole British press by dishonestly overturning Nightjack injunction

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 7 February 2012 at 18:36
Tags: Journalism, Journalists, Leveson

If you can’t believe the words of the UK’s “paper of record” when it is making a case at the High Court – what can you believe?

For that reason,  and many others, today’s Nightjack’s revelations mark one of the most shocking turns of the Leveson Inquiry. (more…)

-

Dacre’s list – why Mail editor’s plan for a new press card system has some merit

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 7 February 2012 at 12:08
Tags: Journalism, Journalists, Law, Leveson

Just moments after counsel for the Leveson Inquiry Robert Jay QC said yesterday: “let us assume, Mr Dacre, that licensing of journalists may well be unattractive to virtually everybody, including this Inquiry” – Daily Mail editor Paul Dacre went on to propose pretty much just that.

To everyone’s surprise, Dacre suggested that one solution to the “Desmond problem” of how to lock rogue publishers into a new system of self-regulation would be to reform the press card system. He stressed that this was his idea alone, not a PCC or Pressbof one, but it has to be noted that he is a leading member of both those bodies – and is also the UK’s most powerful newspaper editor – so he has great influence over both. (more…)

-

What do you think needs to be in Press Gazette’s Journalism Manifesto?

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 3 February 2012 at 11:16
Tags: Journalism, Journalists


We’ve had some great responses to the Journalism Manifesto so far – some of which will make it into a second draft of the document which we are going to send to both Lords Leveson and Hunt.

Press Gazette is going to keep this “consultation” open until the end of next week- 17 February – after which time we will send off a final version, with responses from Press Gazette readers. (more…)

-

Journalism Manifesto: Why we need to look at more than changing the plumbing of the press complaints system

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 2 February 2012 at 12:20
Tags: Journalism, Journalists

Today Press Gazette launches a Journalism Manifesto – ten ways in which we think British journalism can learn from the hacking scandal and emerge from it stronger and more honest.

At the heart of the manifesto is the idea that journalism needs be about more than pushing stories to the limits of  what we can get away with – but that it needs to follow a new set of principles based on fairness, trust, transparency and honour.

Lord Hunt is currently drawing up his proposals for a reformed Press Complaints Commission – and he seems to have taken on board the need for change brought about by the hacking scandal.

But Press Gazette thinks we need to go further than changing the plumbing of the press complaints system. We need to look at problems like the secrecy which many major news organisations cloak themselves in, special treatment for advertisers in editorial, the scandal of slave-labour internship schemes and the practice of giving pampered celebrities copy-approval over editorial.

Most importantly, the new post hacking settlement for the British press needs to take into account the pressures which ordinary journalists are put under and should be more than another cosy deal between a small group of senior editors, owners, publishers and politicians. 

Because while the witch-hunt continues for individual journalists who have broken the rules – and the arrests pile up – it has to be acknowledged that the pressure to behave unethically, and the culture which allowed it, came from the very top.

Read Press Gazette Journalism Manifesto here – and please add your suggestions to it in the comments.


-

February edition of Press Gazette magazine: A manifesto for change in British journalism

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 1 February 2012 at 15:37
Tags: Journalism

I had a cracking exclusive interview lined up for this month’s mag but, alas, at the last minute the individual thought better of going on the record. Perhaps understandably in view of the current Leveson inquisition – few high profile journalists in the national press want to place their heads above the parapet. Such are the challenges of editing Press Gazette!

So instead, with the first module of the first stage of Leveson during to a close, we thought we would lead the February edition of the magazine with our proposals for the future of press regulation.

As independent watchers and chroniclers of UK journalism I guess we are as well placed as anyone to have a stab at doing this and, dare I say it, as the trade title for British journalists it is our duty to do so. The proposals are laid out in full in the magazine and I hope they form a talking point (more details too on our website tomorrow).

Ethics and fairness should be the bedrock of great journalism, but that foundation has begun to look a big shaky in recent years for some sections of the press. Our manifesto goes much further than the Leveson Inquiry to propose a wholesale reform of the way British journalism operates.  

PCC chairman Lord Hunt is currently drawing up the industry’s response to Leveson and the hacking scandal. Press Gazette hopes that this time the solution is not a stitch-up between a narrow group of senior editors, publishers and owners – but is instead a genuine reflection of the widespread consultation across the industry which Hunt has been engaged in.

Other highlights of the February edition:

Jon Slattery asks how easy is it to get an NUJ press card? And he speaks to Sally Murrer, the journalist who proposed News of the World private investigator Derek Webb to join the union.

John Dale interviews Dave Thomas and Andy Young, the journalistic double-act behind South West News Service - the Bristol-based outfit which has grown to become the biggest independent agency in the UK and which has produced three current national editors.

Sean McManus reports from the frontline of a hostile environments training course to reveal how journalists can stay alive when they find themselves in a tight spot. (In view of last summer’s English riots this piece should be compulsive reading for any local newspaper journalist in particular).

Conscientious objectors: Tony Harcup makes the case for a conscience clause in the Editors’ Code, and examines the PCC’s refusal over the years to take on board concerns raised by ordinary journalists who have felt they have come under pressure to behave unethically.

Local TV. With 20 stations set to be awarded licences this summer – Peter Kirwan explains why the financial odds still seem stacked against Local TV, and former Today editor Kevin Marsh explains why he now thinks the project could work.

Former Daily Mail head of editorial legal Eddie Young explains why he signed off the paper’s infamous Murderers front page 15 years ago even though, as editor Paul Dacre said, “this was contempt of a cosmic order”.

Freelance of the month Rob McGibbon: “I’ve been on freelance island since 1990. I’m doing a longer stretch in solitary than Papillon.”

Exit interview with outgoing Associated Press chief Tom Curley: “Ask the tough questions, launch into the story and get to the critical questions. Don’t be pushed aside or told to walk the other way.”

If you’d like to subscribe to Press Gazette call 0845 155 1845.The current rates are as follows:

New subscriber: £90 plus a free USB stick (see all these great benefits).

Member of the NUJ: £50 a year (click on this link or telephone 0845 155 1845).

Retired: £40 a year (click on this link or telephone 0845 155 1845).

Students: £40 a year (call on 0845 155 1856, this offer not available online).

DON’T FORGET: ALL SUBSCRIBERS TO PRESS GAZETTE NOW BENEFIT FROM ACCESS TO AN ARCHIVE OF OVER 200 DIGITAL EDITIONS AT NO EXTRA COST VIA www.exacteditions.com


-

Poll: Do you understand Government NHS reforms, and do you agree with them?

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 31 January 2012 at 11:07
Tags: Journalism

Health mags – the Health Service Journal, Nursing Times and BMJ – today joined forces to campaign for a stop to proposed Government reforms of the NHS with a rare join editorial.

The BMJ also asked its readership of doctors if they even understood the need for the reforms – the vast majority, so far, said they didn’t. It all suggests that the Government is not doing a very good job of making the case for NHS reform.

Do journalists in general understand the proposed reforms of the NHS, or agree with the need for them?

(more…)

-

Arrest of Sun four is most shocking hacking scandal development since News of the World closure

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 30 January 2012 at 15:23
Tags: Journalism

The arrest of four of The Sun’s most senior journalists on Saturday morning was – for me – the most shocking development in the hacking scandal since the closure of the News of the World in July.

It should be noted that these arrests are linked to the hacking scandal only in the sense that the evidence which prompted them came to light as a result of a trawl for data inside News International which was prompted by the phone-hacking legal actions. (more…)

Previous Posts

-

Advertisement

E-mail Newsletter Signup

-

Advertisement

-

Advertisement